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TU#01 Insight - Wolf anthropology v/s Context-specific methodology

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Manage episode 328315421 series 3348838
Content provided by Emergent Futures CoLab. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Emergent Futures CoLab or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Is a shift in reflexivity possible in the short-term ethnographic work that has been recently gaining popularity in anthropology? Ethnography is not a toolkit, and there is no one-size-fits-all when it comes to collaborative research methodology. Performance ethnography can just as easily constitute a “wolf anthropology,” where the scholar forces collaboration and pushes their own agenda. In fact, “performance” has become a trope for community engagement, where the neoliberal academy has usurped the language of social justice, only to recreate colonial power relations and extractivist research processes. We need to resist the urge towards imposing our own - potentially neocolonial - flavours of “equity” and “equality” with our interlocutors. Ethnography should always be context-specific and driven by the needs of the community. In fact, our interlocutors might sometimes be more interested in “a politics of invisibility” instead of recognition.

Read insights from the talk here: https://www.urgentemergent.org/talking-uncertainty/kazubowski-houston.

All our talks are recorded and published on our website. Kindly register to become an EFC member at urgentemergent.org if you would like to attend and participate in the live talks.

  continue reading

26 episodes

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Manage episode 328315421 series 3348838
Content provided by Emergent Futures CoLab. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Emergent Futures CoLab or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Is a shift in reflexivity possible in the short-term ethnographic work that has been recently gaining popularity in anthropology? Ethnography is not a toolkit, and there is no one-size-fits-all when it comes to collaborative research methodology. Performance ethnography can just as easily constitute a “wolf anthropology,” where the scholar forces collaboration and pushes their own agenda. In fact, “performance” has become a trope for community engagement, where the neoliberal academy has usurped the language of social justice, only to recreate colonial power relations and extractivist research processes. We need to resist the urge towards imposing our own - potentially neocolonial - flavours of “equity” and “equality” with our interlocutors. Ethnography should always be context-specific and driven by the needs of the community. In fact, our interlocutors might sometimes be more interested in “a politics of invisibility” instead of recognition.

Read insights from the talk here: https://www.urgentemergent.org/talking-uncertainty/kazubowski-houston.

All our talks are recorded and published on our website. Kindly register to become an EFC member at urgentemergent.org if you would like to attend and participate in the live talks.

  continue reading

26 episodes

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